Glenn Greenwald Keeps the Ugly ‘Dual Loyalty’ Accusation Alive

Glenn Greenwald speaking in New Zealand in 2014. Photo: Robert O’Neill.

Even before the birth of the modern State of Israel, Jews have stood accused of not being sufficiently loyal to the nations in which they reside. Its contemporary manifestation, however, almost always centers around the notion of dual loyalty: a charge that Jews are more loyal to Israel than their own nation.

Often, such charges of dual loyalty are infused with a narrative attributing enormous power to Jewish communities that typically represent a tiny fraction of the overall population. Such a synthesis of disloyalty on the one hand and exaggerated power on the other allows the accuser to charge the Jewish community of working to undermine their nation, often alleging that such Jews are dangerous aliens who represent nothing short of a fifth column.

One of the earliest examples of this fusion of “excessive” Jewish power with dual loyalty was the suspicion in parts of medieval Christian Europe that Jews were in league with Muslim powers. The charges of dual loyalty were seen from the Dreyfuss Affair through the Nazi rise to power and, indeed, to a great degree it underlay the failure of European emancipation.

Closer to home, in the 1920s Henry Ford published The International Jew: The World’s Problem, where it was asserted, along with other calumnies, that Jews were pushing the United States towards war for financial reasons and to achieve world domination.

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While after World War II, manifestations of this charge often remained on the fringes of American society, Paul Findley — a former Republican US congressman — published They Dare to Speak Out, an attack on the “Israel lobby” that became a best-seller in 1985. In it, Findley maintained that many American Jews utilized “tactics which stifle dissent in their own communities and throughout America” to benefit Israel.

More recently, academics considered to be foreign policy “realists” — Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer — wrote of the “stranglehold” that the “Israel Lobby” exercises over Congress and its “manipulation of the media.” They asserted that it works hard to “squelch debate.” They also argued that the 2003 Iraq war wouldn’t have been possible without the influence of the Israel Lobby.

While paleoconservative commentators, not surprisingly, have championed this narrative — Pat Buchanan wrote in 2008 that “Israel and its Fifth Column in [Washington, DC] seek to stampede us into war with Iran” — some liberal columnists have engaged in similar rhetoric. For instance, Joe Klein asserted on Time magazine’s Swampland blog that Jewish neoconservatives “plumped” for the war in Iraq, and are now doing the same for “an even more foolish assault on Iran,” with the goal of making the world “safe for Israel.” In the ensuing controversy, many progressive bloggers jumped to Klein’s defense.

The antisemitic nature of such charges has been codified by both the US State Department and the European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia — the former defining as antisemitic“accusing Jewish citizens of being more loyal to Israel, or to the alleged priorities of Jews worldwide, than to the interests of their own nations.”

The only unfortunate by-product of Leon Wieseltier’s spot-on essay in The New Republic regarding blogger Andrew Sullivan’s increasing hostility towards Israel and Jews is that such a critique, and the buzz it caused in the blogosphere, was that by focusing on a pundit whose commentary merely suggests an antisemitic bias it allowed equally influential liberal bloggers, such as Glenn Greenwald of Salon, who often explicitly advance such antisemitic tropes as excessive Jewish control and dual loyalty, to escape public scrutiny. (My JCPA essay documenting such commentary is here.)

Greenwald’s use of classic antisemitic narratives regarding Jewish power was seen most clearly when he warned darkly in March 2009 of the Jewish lobby’s “stranglehold” on US policy and its alleged assault on the First Amendment.

He has even descended to tropes more typical of classic right-wing antisemitism. For instance, in a 2007 passage that employed tropes about Jewish power and dual loyalty, while also warning of the corrosive effects of Jewish money, he said, “Large and extremely influential Jewish donor groups are the ones agitating for a US war against Iran, and that is the case because those groups are devoted to promoting Israel’s interests.”

Greenwald, at times, engages in vitriolic and outright demonizing rhetoric to describe the “true” motivations of well-known Jewish supporters of Israel — accusing them of an almost savage lust for war. Greenwald has written, “It is difficult to find someone with a more psychopathicindifference to the slaughter of innocent peoplein pursuit of shadowy, unstated political goalsthan Charles Krauthammer.” Greenwald has also characterized Senator Joe Lieberman as “bloodthirsty.”

This past week, Greenwald engaged in similar dual-loyalty rhetoric against Jewish-American Congressman Gary Ackerman in a post entitled, “What Motivates Iran Hawk Ackerman?” Anyone familiar with Greenwald would instantly understand that he’s not merely asking a question. Nor is he attempting to rationally refute Ackerman’s argument in favor of harsh sanctions against Iran — a nation designated by the US State Department as a state sponsor of terrorism since 1984 — in order to prevent their acquisition of nuclear weapons.

Rather, Greenwald engages in an ad hominem attack on the Jewish congressman who, he notes, issued his remarks in favor of tough sanctions in front of “an Israeli and American flag.”

Greenwald coolly notes that it is “simply impossible to deny that this highly influential American Congressman, devoted to pushing the US to war with Iran, is driven, at least in substantial part, by his fervent devotion to Israel.”

That Greenwald, a former Constitutional lawyer and civil rights litigator, could simply be ignorant of the lethal history of this facile narrative about Jewish power he so frequently engages in is certainly possible. But one thing is certain: 65 years after the Holocaust, with Jews representing roughly 2% of the American population, it is horribly dispiriting that the charge that organized Jewry is too powerful and pushing the United States to war is once again becoming fashionable.

Wieseltier, in his New Republic essay, describes Sullivan as belonging “to the party of Mearsheimer and the clique of Walt … to the herd of fearless dissidents who proclaim in all seriousness, without in any way being haunted by the history of such an idea, that Jews control Washington.” It is clear that this clique increasingly includes those who take cover behind a progressive veneer.

Adam Levick covers the British media for CAMERA, the 65,000-member Boston-based Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America.

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